|
Lava Creek
truck blockade, Elaho
Valley, Canada. Photo: Zoe Blunt
Shaking The Tree: One Protester's Ordeal The
thirty-year-old activist Dennis Zarelli was convicted of obstructing
justice in December 2006. A British Columbia Supreme Court
judge refused to believe police endangered his life in a tree-sit one
hundred
and fifty feet off the ground. He is facing nine months in jail at his
sentencing in February 2007. “Even had someone died six
years ago, it
seems the courts would have found that it was our own fault.” As the battle raged six
years ago, it looked
like the old-growth forests of the But International Forest
Products (Interfor)
kept marching on. Each year, chainsaws and bulldozers chewed through
whole
mountainsides full of cedar, fir and hemlock, leaving massive scars on
the
steep slopes and filling fish streams with silt. Repeated appeals to the
government and
Interfor failed, so forest advocates took to civil disobedience and
peaceful
protests to stop the logging. I was with Zarelli and other forest
defenders on
the frontlines of Interfor’s logging operations for months at a
stretch. We
built a protest camp at the end of the road from downed trees and
tarps, and
took turns cooking communal meals, hauling water, and playing
cat-and-mouse
games with the loggers. By the end of July two dozen people were camped
at the
road’s end. We were holding the line to
protect
thousand-year-old firs and cedars north of Lava Creek. The previous
year,
contractors had punched in a logging road over fierce resistance and
incredibly
rough terrain. The battle front shifted to the new bridge over Lava
Creek,
which was the only way to access the upper valley.
Photo: Western Canada Wilderness Committee. Using peaceful civil disobedience in this case meant putting our bodies on the line in such a way that the workers would have to risk killing someone to carry on with the logging. Normally, it’s an effective method for stopping traffic. But years of confrontations in the In September 1999, a hundred loggers descended on the camp in September 1999 to make good on their threats to get rid of us once and for all. I was in Whistler that day, and others were in court. The eight remaining campers tried reasoning with the mob, but to no avail. Loggers beat and choked three people, who were teken to hospital after the attack. They burned the camp to the ground, destroying $30,000 worth of equipment, gear and personal belongings. Police took six hours to respond to 911 calls, and once they arrived, they arrested the tree-sitter and let the thugs go. Peaceful civil disobedience is a real challenge in these circumstances. But the violence by loggers
– and what was
seen as complicity by police – only made the protestors more determined
to use
peaceful means to stop the destruction. “Everything we were doing
kept getting more
escalated,” Zarelli says. “We didn’t want to block the road for just a
day or
two.” He and three friends set out to create a hard blockade, one that
would
keep the road blocked for a couple weeks. They devised a system to put
themselves in harm’s way, block the bridge, and stay out of reach of
the
police, all at the same time. The tree-sit blockade was a
calculated risk.
The four tree-sit platforms were suspended from ropes anchored to the
treetops
and to the bridge blockade. The ropes ran from the top of one tree,
down to the
bridge, through a pipe wedged under the pickup truck, out the other end
of the
pipe, and up to the top of the second tree. The truck itself was filled
with rocks,
piled with logs and wrapped in barbed wire. Two signs warned that
tampering
with the structure would cause the platforms to drop, and the
tree-sitters
would fall to their deaths. When the tree sits and
bridge blockade were
set up, the area was under a court injunction and the Royal Canadian
Mounted
Police were keeping a close eye on the protest site. The tree-sitters
were
confident the RCMP would heed the signs and be very cautious when they
moved in
to make the arrests. They were mistaken. From July 26 to August 2,
dozens of RCMP
officers laid siege to the blockade. An Emergency Response Team was
mobilized,
and footage of rifle-toting sharpshooters storming over the bridge was
broadcast on national television for a week. But as the days wore on,
the cops
grew visibly frustrated that they could not evict the protestors in the
trees. They took it out on anyone
within reach.
From his perch in the tree, Zarelli watched three officers drag me by
the neck
from the woods, twist my cuffed hands up behind my back, and throw me
headfirst
into a police trailer. I ended up with damage to my arms, shoulders and
neck.
(The cops told a judge later that I injured myself, and she took them
at their
word.) ![]() Left: Zoe gets busted. Photo: Daniel Gautreau By July 28, officers had
partially
dismantled the blockade on the bridge. Then, without any warning, Insp.
Bud
Mercer used a pruning rod to cut the ropes supporting the platforms.
What
happened next became the focus of police investigations and court
battles for
six years. RCMP Cpl. Darik Schaap dismantling the blockade. Photo: Zoe Blunt When the lines were cut, the
platforms
suddenly tilted. The tree-sitters panicked when they realized the main
support
lines were no longer holding them. A witness reported: The platforms drop, catching
in lower parts
of the canopy. One of the sitters is hanging from a branch screaming at
the
cops until helped back up. The action on the line is frantic, the goons
with
the big guns are off in the bush, police climbers start to climb the
connected
trees to cut off traverse points. The climbers move slowly, another cop
on the
ground yells instructions through a megaphone. (Journal
of Sasquatchology) Philippa Joly, another
witness on the
ground, watched in horror as the lines were cut. “I remember seeing them cut
the rope and
then there was this slow-motion feeling – everything slowed down,” she
recalls.
“I saw the rope fall out of the tree. It came falling down. I saw other
things
falling from the tree. We were all holding our breath, waiting to see
what
would happen.” The four young people
remained in the
treetops, clinging to the now-unstable platforms. Later, the police climbers
assaulted the
tree-sit in earnest. As the climbers started up the un-armored tree,
the two
sitters in that tree scooted across the high-wire traverse line and
joined
their companions in the armored tree. The climbers backed off and did
not try
to pursue the protestors. “It was like living in a war
zone,” Joly
says. A police helicopter circled and hovered overhead. ”[The police]
were
totally insane, with full-on camouflage and sniper rifles. Then they
disappeared into the woods. And we’re like, what’s going on? Are our
friends
safe?” The standoff that followed
lasted five more
days before the four protestors climbed down and gave themselves up to
be
arrested. They later pleaded guilty and were sentenced to time served –
one
day. Dennis Zarelli under
arrest after nine days in the tree. Photo courtesy of Dennis Zarelli
The shock of watching the
officer cut the
rope was too much for Zarelli to just let it go. In September 2000,
Zarelli
filed a complaint against Inspector Mercer, and a justice of the peace
laid
four criiminal charges of aggravated assault against the RCMP officer. It’s rare for police to face
criminal
charges for acts they commit on the job, and Zarelli didn’t expect much
to come
out of it. “I wanted to basically see
attention drawn
to the RCMP acting recklessly at the blockades,” he explains. “They
were
working with
Interfor.” Officers
stood by while a forest worker drove an excavator into the legs of a
tripod
that was occupied by a protestor, he says. The rest of us had witnessed
similar
incidents. Protestors were hauled off
and charged over
minor acts of peaceful civil disobedience at the request of the
company. But
when loggers threatened us with guns and violence, we couldn’t even get
the
cops to take a report. Two forest defenders were
sentenced to a
full year in the pokey just for standing in the road. Not
one of the
thugs who beat the campers and burned down the camp spent a day in jail.
Zarelli felt he had the
potential to turn
the tables and use the legal system to hold the police accountable, for
once.
But the charges against Insp. Mercer were stayed a month after they
were filed.
When the Crown prosecutor reviewed the police videotape, he said there
was no
evidence Zarelli’s life was in danger. Then the harassment started:
phone calls to
Zarelli’s parents, his friends, and their employers from people
identifying
themselves as agents with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service
(CSIS).
His house was under surveillance for months. Finally, the penny dropped.
Word came that
the RCMP had issued a warrant for his arrest – the Crown was charging
him with
obstructing justice for filing a false police report. (The perjury
charge was
added later.) Zarelli turned himself in. The court drama that played
out in December
2006 was surreal, Zarelli says. The Crown lawyer argued the protestors
were
trying to entrap the police. The blockade and the connected tree
platforms were
an “elaborate ruse,” according to Crown prosecutor Ralph Keefer. The
claim that
they were using civil disobedience to stop the logging was a charade,
he said.
The four forest defenders just wanted to get the cops in trouble on
national
television. The prosecutor accused Zarelli of planning the whole thing
just so
he could lay false charges against Corporal Mercer. Incredibly, BC Supreme Court
judge Sunni
Stromberg-Stein agreed. In her reasons for judgement, she stated, “This
was not
an act of civil disobedience; this was a criminal act.” Joly attended Zarelli’s
trial because she
wanted to witness the proceedings. “It felt really important to be at
court
because I was there when it happened.” She says the cops all told the
same
story, but on examination, their testimony actually underscored
Zarelli’s
complaint that they were negligent. “All the cops said they
couldn’t see how the
ropes were set up,” Joly tells me. “All the cops gave statements
affirming they
couldn’t see the ropes from the ground, but the reaction when the ropes
were
cut led them to believe the setup was a ruse.” “But the fact that they cut
the ropes
without knowing if it was safe to cut them just showed their negligence
– which
was Dennis’s original complaint.” “The Crown was trying to
show we hate the
police,” Zarelli says. “He was bringing up stuff from ten years ago,
things
that happened in the Walbran [Valley] and Clayoquot Sound. I wasn’t
even at
those protests.” Joly finds the Crown’s
arguments
unbelievable. “They were playing up this thing about us having a
vendetta
against Bud Mercer. Until that day he hadn’t even been there. We didn’t
even
know him.” Zarelli was convicted of
obstructing
justice. He escaped a perjury conviction on a technicality, because the
original complaint against Insp. Mercer was not taken under oath.
Zarelli faces
nine months in jail at his sentencing February 20, 2007. Zarelli says the trial’s
outcome is deeply
disturbing, and not just for him. “If people put their lives
on the line to
protect the environment, and the cops come in and take them out with
reckless
regards to their lives, the cops will now be able to refer to my case
saying
that environmentalists hate the cops and will lie in court for their
cause,” he
says bitterly. Today. the thousand-year-old
firs and cedars
still stand north of Lava Creek. Facing beatings and brutality, long
prison
sentences and death threats, the forest defenders held the line. We
were forced
out and hauled off in handcuffs, but we would not give up, and we kept
coming
back. Interfor finally began
serious negotiations
with the Squamish Nation and a moratorium on logging in the
|
|